RACISM AND REPRESSION See Editorial Page giW A6 ~Iiazt& WHETHER High-43 Low--Z8 Slightly warmer, chance of rain Vol. LXXX, No. 138 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, March 20, 1970 Ten Cents Ten Wages 0 STR TORS C SH ITH POLICE AFTER REGE TS SET 10o B CK D 1ss10 S GO L BAM LEADERS REJECT REGENTAL RESOLUTION By ROB BIER The Regents yesterday established an admissions goal "aimed at 10 per cent enrollment of black students and sub- stantially increased numbers of other minority and disad- vantaged groups" by 1973-74. A proposal aimed at meeting the demands of the Black Action Movement was passed unanimously by the Regents, with Regent Otis Smith (D-Detroit) absent. However, leaders of BAM immediately rejected the resolution as inadequate. Speaking after the meeting to a crowd on Regents Plaza BAM leader Ron Harris said, "What the Regents passed today is a hoax. It's the same seven point plan President Robben Fleming tried to put over on us before." ,J Ed school' revisions, 4t By PAT MAHONEY Major revisions in the education school's administration, curriculum and policies on student decision- making have been proposed by the school's ad hoc student-faculty assembly. The assembly, in a report re- leased yesterday, called for re- organizing the school's nine de- partments into f o u r divisions which would be subdivided into programs "with a specific focus, methodology and educational pur- pose." "The school should reorganize on the basis of programs," ex- plained Jack Eisner, Grad, co- chairman of the assembly. "The undergraduate curriculum is a col- lection of courses in diffuse asso- ciation with the school." Assistant Dean Lowell Beach maintained that all groups and individuals evaluating the school recently have said it has too many departments. The report recommends that students receive voting rights on all school committees, including the executive committee which is the highest administrative deci- sion making body in the school. Presently students have had de facto voting rights on all commit- tees, except the executive where they have two non-voting repre- sentatives. The report calls for an increase in student membership on the ex- ecutive committee from two to three and forming curriculum and research coordinating committees with five faculty members and four students. The four proposed divisions would be teacher education, edu- cation services, higher education and educational foundations and research. The report also suggests that evaluation of the divisions be carried out by committees created within the units. The school's policies would be evaluated in an on-going fashion by a proposed appraisal commit- tee. In a statement released early this morning, BAM said: "We of BAM find the Regents proposal completely repugnant to us. It makes no commitment to anything of any major importance. Indeed, it is worse than the president's 'weasel worded' statement. It is worse because it is an attempt to dupe the people of Michigan, pre- tending to make a change when all it does is capitalize the same old message: 'S-H-I-T.' Until the Regents come to their senses-to their sensitivities - we) shall not recognize their authority, their legitimacy or their existence. Such officials are an insult to the power of the people." Under that program and the one adopted by the Regents, the number of students in the Op- portunity Awards Program would be doubled by 1973-74 and funds for the program would increase over four years from $1 million to $3 million. The plan also called for intensified efforts to r a i s e further funds from state, local and gift sources. The resolution passed by t h e Regents stated that admissions goals will be arrived at separately from goals of increased financial aid. Both that provision and the 10 per cent goal are changes from the original administration proposal which called for a black enroll- ment goal of seven per cent. A committee under S t e p h e n Spurr, vice president and dean of, the graduate school, whose office oversees financial aids and ad- missions, will be established to co- ordinate recruiting efforts. To that end, the Regents established a minimum of $100,000 for hiring of recruiting staff which will be- gin work next fall. General f u n d money totaling $170,000 will be spent on the black studies p r o- gram and the black community center. Harris addressed the Regents af- ter presentation of the revised administration plan saying there had been no specific response to a number of the BAM demands. He cited the demand for nine under- graduate recruiters, 900 new black students by fall 1971, and 50 new Chicano students and a Chicano recruiter next fall. Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith rplied that those matters could "be met through the committee which has been proposed" under Spurr. See REGENTS, Page 6 BLACKS, SUPPORTERS MARCH AROUND CAMPUS By ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Expressing dissatisfaction with a program approved by the Regents for increasing minority admissions, some 800 people held a massive march around campus yesterday, end- ing in a violent confrontation with city and state police. The police were called to the Administration Bldg. at the request of the University executive officers after several win- dows were smashed and a number of the demonstrators had entered the building. The violence began when about 200 of the demonstrators attempted to block the movement of a patrol car situated in the Michigan Union driveway next to West Quadrangle. The car was carrying a demonstrator who had been arrested. Several demonstrators resisted the efforts of about 20 city police to push the demon- strators onto the sidewalk and U a melee broke out which lasted about ten minutes. The march followed a rally in Regents Plaza where Ron Harris, Movement, called on the students, members of the faculty, and mem- bers of the non-academic staff to join in a moratorium of Univer- or need sity activities. BAM first called for the moratorium Wednesday night. Its effects on class attendance WASHINGTON (d) - President yesterday were unclear, however. Nixon yesterday called for major increases in federal assistance to . During the disturbances follow- college students with a heavy em- ing the march, four people were phasis on increasing government arrested. They were arraigned on grants and subsidized loans to stu- charges ranging from malicious dents from low-income families. destruction of property, a misde- meanor, to assault with intent to Nixon's proposals came in a do great bodily harm, a felony. special message' to Congress and University Hospital reported will be followed by a request for treating one state police officer a Higher Education Act of 1970. for laceration of the skull. The President estimated that by M . b t -Daily-Randy Edmonds Crowd throngs behind car after first arrest BAMIt rally a] By LARRY LEMPERT and W. E. SCHROCK The Black Action Movement (BAM) and a coalition of whitej supporters last night called for aI 10 a.m. rally today outside Hill Aud., a half hour before the be- ginning of the Honors Convoca- tion. The rally is designed to in- itiate a class strike in support of BAM's demands for increased minority admissions and aid. lo initiate- strike with The Health Service treated one student for a similar injury. Al spokesman for St. Joseph's Hos- pital declined comment on wheth- er the hospital treated any par- ticipants in the disturbances. The protest began after leaders of BAM expressed displeasure with the minority admissions program adopted by the Regents at their meeting yesterday. The Regents established a goal of enrolling enough black stu- dents to equal 10 per cent of the student body by the 1973-74 aca- demic year. They committed the University to increasing its allo- cation to financial aid programs to allow a minimum black enroll- ment of five to six per cent. Meanwhile, the University will at- tempt to 'raise additional funds from outside sources to finance the black enrollment above the five to six per cent figure. The demands of the Black Ac- tion Movement had called on the University to commit itself to en- rolling and financing the full 10 per cent. At 1:15 p.m., after the Regents adjourned, BAM leaders held a rally in Regents Plaza, where about 800 BAM supporters had been gathering since 11 a.m. During the subsequent march around Central Campus, the dem- onstrators passed through Angell Hall, Mason Hall, the West En- gineering Bldg. and the Physics- Astronomy Bldg. chanting slogans' in an effort to convince students in classrooms to join the mora- torium, and the march. Several BAM supporters entered See 800, Page 6° fiscal 1972 the new programs pro- posed would increase government spending by $400 million. Under the Nixon plan, grants and subsidized loans would be con- centrated on students from famil- ies with incomes under $1,000. He said that in fiscal 1970 these pro- grams provided an estimated $577 million and he has recommended that it be increased to $633 mhillion in fiscal 1971. Under the proposal a student from a family with a $3,000 income could in fiscal 1971 obtain $821 and in fiscal 1972 $1,400. The proposal also said that "every low-income student enter- ing an accredited college would be eligible for a combination of fed- eral grants and subsidized loans sufficient to give him the same ability to pay as a student from a family earning $10,000." At the same time, more affluent students would be able to augment their own resources with federally guaranteed loans up to $2,500 a year to be repaid after graduation over periods of up to 20 years. Among higher education sources there was concern that the revised loan features, with higher interest rates and longer repayment per- iods, could leave graduating stu- dents heavily in debt and faced with the prospect of paying double for their educations. These same sources were con- cerned that the President's mes- sage made no mention of federal financial help for constructing additional facilities to provide for larger enrollments. t Honors 'Convocation BAM and the coalition, which included members of International Socialists, Students for a Demo- cratic Society, New Mobe, and the Student Mobilization Committee met in two separate meetings last night to organize the strike. BAM leaders announced the strike in a rally outside the Ad- ministration Bldg. yesterday af- ternoon expressing dissatisfaction with the Regents program, passed yesterday, setting a goal of 10 per cent black enrollment by 1973-74. Also last night, Student Gov- ernment C o u n c i 1 unanimously voted to urge students to support the strike "until the demands of BAM are met." The BAM demands call for the University to commit itself to es- tablishing an enrollment of 10 per cent black students by 1973-74, with corresponding increases in LSA CURRICULUM COMMITTEE Group, By JANE BARTMAN The literary college curriculum com mittee yesterday decided to postpon indefinitely its review of the merits o the pass-fail grading system. The committee has long intended t conduct the review and began discu, sions about a month ago, in order t determine whether the system should b used throughout the school, just fo some courses, or not at all. The postponement was a result of th committee's approval, 5-1, of a proposa making Economics 202 experimentall pass-fail, with the understanding tha no further review of the pass-fail systen would be undertaken this academic yeas shelves p Juniors and seniors now have the op- 1- tion of taking one course per semester e pass-fail, but it cannot count towards f distribution or concentration, require- ments. In addition, some introductory o courses are being offered pass-fail, and s- students may take courses for their o language requirement pass-fail. )e Pass-fail will be employed by Prof. r Daniel Fusfeld - in the introductory economics course, Econ 202, for a time e limit of two years. Students taking the al course will receive, the traditional letter y grades for papers and exams in t h e t course, but their final grades will be n converted to a "pass" or "fail." r. Data evaluating the effects is to be ass-fail pass-fail grades release students superficial pressures and busy-wo whether they will effect a loweri the performance of students. Fusfeld appeared before the co: tee on Feb. 12 and explained hi. sons for preferring a pass-fail s to the committee, saying his expel has shown him that the present s, is disfunctional on two accoun generates a tension-filled, adversa lationship between the teacher an dents which interferes with lea: and gives students the wrong s' about what they ought to be doi courses. Fusfeld said students tend to proposal from that it may provide a strong enough rk or committment to the values of the pass- ng of fail grading system, and it might effect a devaluation of the "pass" or "fail" mmit- grade - students would have varied s rea- motives in determining which type to ystem work under. For example, some might rience take courses on a pass-fail basis because ystem they think they'll have to do less work. ts: it There was also disagreement about ry re- when the system should be used, if used d stu- for only some courses. rning, "This is okay as an experiment," ignals Dean Hayes said, "but is this really ng in something we want to get into with re- quired courses?" Others felt that stu- view dents might prefer to have the pass-fail view uni ariuarfor required courses. financial aid to minority stud is who could not otherwise affor to attend the University. The students believe that the Regents' establishment of a goal of 10 per cent black enrollment does not represent the kind of commitment they demanded. The Honors Convocation, which began in 1924, will honor under- graduate students for those stu- dents who have a 3.5 grade point average for the previous two se- mesters. A Drop-Out convocation, to protest the Honors Convocation and the University's academic and fiscal priorities, was scheduled to occur at 10 a.m. at Hill Aud. but was cancelled in support of BAM. S=C will meet with President Robben Fleming at 1:30 p.m. to- day in the Student Activities Bldg. "to convey to Mr. Fleming the depth and intensity of support among students for BAM demands. Another matter which has gen- erated deep concern among SGC and student body and which will be raised at our meeting is the alarming frequency of presence of police on campus." The Honors Convocation was chosen as the location for the rally because the students believe it will be the focal point of attention today. While BAM met separately,;sev- eral spokesmen for BAM met with the white coalition. The coalition planned to speak in dormitories